By Erik Wasson - The Hill

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office
said Friday that President Obamas 2013 budget will hurt the economy in the long term arguing the

larger deficits it would produce would reduce the amount of capital available to businesses.
After five years the CBO says the Obama proposals would reduce economic output by between 0.5 percent and 2.2 percent.
Larger deficits caused by the budget would cause the government to issue more bonds sucking up private capital to finance its debts and thereby reducing the funds businesses could use to expand and hire the CBO said. An increased tax on capital gains included in the presidents plan would also tend to reduce private capital it says.
The 2013 Obama budget proposes continuing the Bush tax rates for the middle class and enacting elements of a short-term Jobs Act stimulus. In the near term actions such as these could increase growth by as much as 1.4 percent CBO says.
The new CBO report complements a March estimate that Obamas budget would add $3.5 trillion to deficits over 10 years compared to current law. That report did not try to capture any effects on economic growth.
The White House using a different baseline than CBO has claimed its budget would reduce deficits by $3.2 trillion over 10 years.
Taking economic effects into account Obamas budget could add as much as $3.9 trillion in deficits by 2022 CBO estimates. Slower economic growth tends to increase deficits by reducing tax collection and increasing spending on items like unemployment insurance.
In analyzing the Obama budgets effect on deficits and economic growth the CBO compares it to a current law baseline that assumes large deficit reduction from for example allowing all of the Bush tax rates to expire and doctor payments from Medicare to be slashed.
Congress is unlikely however to allow all of the Bush tax rates to expire because Obama and lawmakers in both parties want to extend the Bush rates for households with annual income less than $250000. Republicans want to extend all of the Bush rates or to lower tax rates.
Similarly Congress has regularly enacted a doc fix to prevent cuts to physician Medicare payments.
Under the current law baseline CBO estimates tax hikes and spending cuts would hurt growth in the short term. But by shrinking deficits it would help economic growth in the long run the CBO says.
Republicans seized on the new report.
CBOs report confirms what millions of Americans already know from experience: the presidents failed policies impede job creation stifle economic growth and ensure a diminished future" House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) said in a statement.